Faux Tin Works

When Chris Plummer, founder of Faux Tin works, once asked a client if he could faux-finish his tin ceiling, the request was denied. But Plummer was hooked on the idea. He scrounged up some old pieces of pressed tin on his own and reimagined them as a canvas: Instead of the typical white tin you find cladding the ceilings of quaint junk shops and bakeries, Plummer’s ornate pressed-tin squares are hand-painted in the style of exquisite gilded plasterwork. The sought-after panels have been installed as ceilings, backsplashes, wainscoting and friezes.

Great porcelain tin RED DOTS - the ideal storage tin or collectors tin for lots of odds and ends. For peanuts, as tea tin, for pickles, for flowers, as chocolate tin, for jams, as pencil tin, for nuts, for berries, for cotton swa...Great porcelain tin RED DOTS - the ideal storage tin or collectors tin for lots of odds and ends. For peanuts, as tea tin, for pickles, for flowers, as chocolate tin, for jams, as pencil tin, for nuts, for berries, for cotton swabs, for rubbers, for drops, as biscuits tin. German design - German quality.

I'd rather have 3 muffin tops than one whole muffin, that's for sure. And now, I can! This reminds me of the Seinfeld episode where they sell muffin tops but can't figure out where to throw out all of the muffin bottoms. Problem s...I'd rather have 3 muffin tops than one whole muffin, that's for sure. And now, I can! This reminds me of the Seinfeld episode where they sell muffin tops but can't figure out where to throw out all of the muffin bottoms. Problem solved. This should have been invented a long time ago. Where was Ben Franklin on this one, eh?

If I only needed a lunch box this would be it! I suppose it could be great for storing other items like craft supplies too.... stainless steel - what a deal. The ones in the picture are 4.3" in diameter, but there are plenty o...If I only needed a lunch box this would be it! I suppose it could be great for storing other items like craft supplies too.... stainless steel - what a deal. The ones in the picture are 4.3" in diameter, but there are plenty of different sizes depending on your use.

In Senegal, Mali, Kenya and other countries in Africa, resourceful people have long excelled at fashioning toys from the available materials - tin cans, wire and scrap rubber and plastic that we would discard as trash.
Continua...In Senegal, Mali, Kenya and other countries in Africa, resourceful people have long excelled at fashioning toys from the available materials - tin cans, wire and scrap rubber and plastic that we would discard as trash.
Continually searching the world for more such innovations, Indigoarts also offers cars, planes, purses and frames from Vietnam, tin ornaments from Mexico, papier-mache bowls from South Africa and cars and trucks from Cuba!